"""This module contains several handy functions primarily meant for internal use."""

from __future__ import division
from datetime import date, datetime, time, timedelta, tzinfo
from calendar import timegm
import re
from functools import partial

from pytz import timezone, utc
import six

try:
    from inspect import signature
except ImportError:  # pragma: nocover
    from funcsigs import signature

try:
    from threading import TIMEOUT_MAX
except ImportError:
    TIMEOUT_MAX = 4294967  # Maximum value accepted by Event.wait() on Windows

__all__ = ('asint', 'asbool', 'astimezone', 'convert_to_datetime', 'datetime_to_utc_timestamp',
           'utc_timestamp_to_datetime', 'timedelta_seconds', 'datetime_ceil', 'get_callable_name',
           'obj_to_ref', 'ref_to_obj', 'maybe_ref', 'repr_escape', 'check_callable_args')


class _Undefined(object):
    def __nonzero__(self):
        return False

    def __bool__(self):
        return False

    def __repr__(self):
        return '<undefined>'

undefined = _Undefined()  #: a unique object that only signifies that no value is defined


def asint(text):
    """
    Safely converts a string to an integer, returning ``None`` if the string is ``None``.

    :type text: str
    :rtype: int

    """
    if text is not None:
        return int(text)


def asbool(obj):
    """
    Interprets an object as a boolean value.

    :rtype: bool

    """
    if isinstance(obj, str):
        obj = obj.strip().lower()
        if obj in ('true', 'yes', 'on', 'y', 't', '1'):
            return True
        if obj in ('false', 'no', 'off', 'n', 'f', '0'):
            return False
        raise ValueError('Unable to interpret value "%s" as boolean' % obj)
    return bool(obj)


def astimezone(obj):
    """
    Interprets an object as a timezone.

    :rtype: tzinfo

    """
    if isinstance(obj, six.string_types):
        return timezone(obj)
    if isinstance(obj, tzinfo):
        if not hasattr(obj, 'localize') or not hasattr(obj, 'normalize'):
            raise TypeError('Only timezones from the pytz library are supported')
        if obj.zone == 'local':
            raise ValueError(
                'Unable to determine the name of the local timezone -- you must explicitly '
                'specify the name of the local timezone. Please refrain from using timezones like '
                'EST to prevent problems with daylight saving time. Instead, use a locale based '
                'timezone name (such as Europe/Helsinki).')
        return obj
    if obj is not None:
        raise TypeError('Expected tzinfo, got %s instead' % obj.__class__.__name__)


_DATE_REGEX = re.compile(
    r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d{1,2})-(?P<day>\d{1,2})'
    r'(?: (?P<hour>\d{1,2}):(?P<minute>\d{1,2}):(?P<second>\d{1,2})'
    r'(?:\.(?P<microsecond>\d{1,6}))?)?')
_DEFAULT_TIMEZONE = timezone('Asia/Shanghai')


def convert_to_datetime(input, tz=_DEFAULT_TIMEZONE, arg_name=""):
    """
    Converts the given object to a timezone aware datetime object.

    If a timezone aware datetime object is passed, it is returned unmodified.
    If a native datetime object is passed, it is given the specified timezone.
    If the input is a string, it is parsed as a datetime with the given timezone.

    Date strings are accepted in three different forms: date only (Y-m-d), date with time
    (Y-m-d H:M:S) or with date+time with microseconds (Y-m-d H:M:S.micro).

    :param str|datetime input: the datetime or string to convert to a timezone aware datetime
    :param datetime.tzinfo tz: timezone to interpret ``input`` in
    :param str arg_name: the name of the argument (used in an error message)
    :rtype: datetime

    """
    if input is None:
        return
    elif isinstance(input, datetime):
        datetime_ = input
    elif isinstance(input, date):
        datetime_ = datetime.combine(input, time())
    elif isinstance(input, six.string_types):
        m = _DATE_REGEX.match(input)
        if not m:
            raise ValueError('Invalid date string')
        values = [(k, int(v or 0)) for k, v in m.groupdict().items()]
        values = dict(values)
        datetime_ = datetime(**values)
    else:
        raise TypeError('Unsupported type for %s: %s' % (arg_name, input.__class__.__name__))

    if datetime_.tzinfo is not None:
        return datetime_
    if tz is None:
        raise ValueError(
            'The "tz" argument must be specified if %s has no timezone information' % arg_name)
    if isinstance(tz, six.string_types):
        tz = timezone(tz)

    try:
        return tz.localize(datetime_, is_dst=None)
    except AttributeError:
        raise TypeError(
            'Only pytz timezones are supported (need the localize() and normalize() methods)')


def datetime_to_utc_timestamp(timeval):
    """
    Converts a datetime instance to a timestamp.

    :type timeval: datetime
    :rtype: float

    """
    if timeval is not None:
        return timegm(timeval.utctimetuple()) + timeval.microsecond / 1000000


def utc_timestamp_to_datetime(timestamp):
    """
    Converts the given timestamp to a datetime instance.

    :type timestamp: float
    :rtype: datetime

    """
    if timestamp is not None:
        return datetime.fromtimestamp(timestamp, utc)


def timedelta_seconds(delta):
    """
    Converts the given timedelta to seconds.

    :type delta: timedelta
    :rtype: float

    """
    return delta.days * 24 * 60 * 60 + delta.seconds + \
        delta.microseconds / 1000000.0


def datetime_ceil(dateval):
    """
    Rounds the given datetime object upwards.

    :type dateval: datetime

    """
    if dateval.microsecond > 0:
        return dateval + timedelta(seconds=1, microseconds=-dateval.microsecond)
    return dateval


def datetime_repr(dateval):
    return dateval.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %Z') if dateval else 'None'


def get_callable_name(func):
    """
    Returns the best available display name for the given function/callable.

    :rtype: str

    """
    # the easy case (on Python 3.3+)
    if hasattr(func, '__qualname__'):
        return func.__qualname__

    # class methods, bound and unbound methods
    f_self = getattr(func, '__self__', None) or getattr(func, 'im_self', None)
    if f_self and hasattr(func, '__name__'):
        f_class = f_self if isinstance(f_self, type) else f_self.__class__
    else:
        f_class = getattr(func, 'im_class', None)

    if f_class and hasattr(func, '__name__'):
        return '%s.%s' % (f_class.__name__, func.__name__)

    # class or class instance
    if hasattr(func, '__call__'):
        # class
        if hasattr(func, '__name__'):
            return func.__name__

        # instance of a class with a __call__ method
        return func.__class__.__name__

    raise TypeError('Unable to determine a name for %r -- maybe it is not a callable?' % func)


def obj_to_ref(obj):
    """
    Returns the path to the given callable.

    :rtype: str
    :raises TypeError: if the given object is not callable
    :raises ValueError: if the given object is a :class:`~functools.partial`, lambda or a nested
        function

    """
    if isinstance(obj, partial):
        raise ValueError('Cannot create a reference to a partial()')

    name = get_callable_name(obj)
    if '<lambda>' in name:
        raise ValueError('Cannot create a reference to a lambda')
    if '<locals>' in name:
        raise ValueError('Cannot create a reference to a nested function')

    return '%s:%s' % (obj.__module__, name)


def ref_to_obj(ref):
    """
    Returns the object pointed to by ``ref``.

    :type ref: str

    """
    if not isinstance(ref, six.string_types):
        raise TypeError('References must be strings')
    if ':' not in ref:
        raise ValueError('Invalid reference')

    modulename, rest = ref.split(':', 1)
    try:
        obj = __import__(modulename, fromlist=[rest])
    except ImportError:
        raise LookupError('Error resolving reference %s: could not import module' % ref)

    try:
        for name in rest.split('.'):
            obj = getattr(obj, name)
        return obj
    except Exception:
        raise LookupError('Error resolving reference %s: error looking up object' % ref)


def maybe_ref(ref):
    """
    Returns the object that the given reference points to, if it is indeed a reference.
    If it is not a reference, the object is returned as-is.

    """
    if not isinstance(ref, str):
        return ref
    return ref_to_obj(ref)


if six.PY2:
    def repr_escape(string):
        if isinstance(string, six.text_type):
            return string.encode('ascii', 'backslashreplace')
        return string
else:
    def repr_escape(string):
        return string


def check_callable_args(func, args, kwargs):
    """
    Ensures that the given callable can be called with the given arguments.

    :type args: tuple
    :type kwargs: dict

    """
    pos_kwargs_conflicts = []  # parameters that have a match in both args and kwargs
    positional_only_kwargs = []  # positional-only parameters that have a match in kwargs
    unsatisfied_args = []  # parameters in signature that don't have a match in args or kwargs
    unsatisfied_kwargs = []  # keyword-only arguments that don't have a match in kwargs
    unmatched_args = list(args)  # args that didn't match any of the parameters in the signature
    # kwargs that didn't match any of the parameters in the signature
    unmatched_kwargs = list(kwargs)
    # indicates if the signature defines *args and **kwargs respectively
    has_varargs = has_var_kwargs = False

    try:
        sig = signature(func)
    except ValueError:
        # signature() doesn't work against every kind of callable
        return

    for param in six.itervalues(sig.parameters):
        if param.kind == param.POSITIONAL_OR_KEYWORD:
            if param.name in unmatched_kwargs and unmatched_args:
                pos_kwargs_conflicts.append(param.name)
            elif unmatched_args:
                del unmatched_args[0]
            elif param.name in unmatched_kwargs:
                unmatched_kwargs.remove(param.name)
            elif param.default is param.empty:
                unsatisfied_args.append(param.name)
        elif param.kind == param.POSITIONAL_ONLY:
            if unmatched_args:
                del unmatched_args[0]
            elif param.name in unmatched_kwargs:
                unmatched_kwargs.remove(param.name)
                positional_only_kwargs.append(param.name)
            elif param.default is param.empty:
                unsatisfied_args.append(param.name)
        elif param.kind == param.KEYWORD_ONLY:
            if param.name in unmatched_kwargs:
                unmatched_kwargs.remove(param.name)
            elif param.default is param.empty:
                unsatisfied_kwargs.append(param.name)
        elif param.kind == param.VAR_POSITIONAL:
            has_varargs = True
        elif param.kind == param.VAR_KEYWORD:
            has_var_kwargs = True

    # Make sure there are no conflicts between args and kwargs
    if pos_kwargs_conflicts:
        raise ValueError('The following arguments are supplied in both args and kwargs: %s' %
                         ', '.join(pos_kwargs_conflicts))

    # Check if keyword arguments are being fed to positional-only parameters
    if positional_only_kwargs:
        raise ValueError('The following arguments cannot be given as keyword arguments: %s' %
                         ', '.join(positional_only_kwargs))

    # Check that the number of positional arguments minus the number of matched kwargs matches the
    # argspec
    if unsatisfied_args:
        raise ValueError('The following arguments have not been supplied: %s' %
                         ', '.join(unsatisfied_args))

    # Check that all keyword-only arguments have been supplied
    if unsatisfied_kwargs:
        raise ValueError(
            'The following keyword-only arguments have not been supplied in kwargs: %s' %
            ', '.join(unsatisfied_kwargs))

    # Check that the callable can accept the given number of positional arguments
    if not has_varargs and unmatched_args:
        raise ValueError(
            'The list of positional arguments is longer than the target callable can handle '
            '(allowed: %d, given in args: %d)' % (len(args) - len(unmatched_args), len(args)))

    # Check that the callable can accept the given keyword arguments
    if not has_var_kwargs and unmatched_kwargs:
        raise ValueError(
            'The target callable does not accept the following keyword arguments: %s' %
            ', '.join(unmatched_kwargs))
